HESI PN EXIT V1 – V7
EXAM
NCLEX (NGN), Case-based Scenarios,
Actu al Qs & An s to Pass th e Exam
THIS HESI PN EXIT CONSISTS OF
Each Exam has 75 Qs and Ans
multiple-choice questions (MCQs)** with four
options (A–D), answers, and detailed rationales
aligned with HESI PN Exit Exam 2025 standards.
Some questions are flagged as **NCLEX-style (NGN)**, and relevant **case studies/vitals** are
integrated where applicable.
,
, Table of Contents
HESI PN EXIT V1 EXAM..................................................................... 2
HESI PN EXIT V2 EXAM..................................................................54
HESI PN EXIT V3 EXAM................................................................108
HESI PN EXIT V4 EXAM................................................................162
HESI PN EXIT V5 EXAM................................................................217
HESI PN EXIT V6 EXAM...............................................................259
HESI PN EXIT V7 EXAM................................................................299
, ### 1.
The practical nurse enters a male client’s room to administer routine morning
medications, but the client is on the phone. Which action is best for the PN to take?
A. Ask another nurse to go back with the medication when the client’s phone call ends
B. Wait for the client to excuse himself from the telephone conversation and observe
the client taking the medication
C. Return the medication to the client’s drawer on the medication cart and
document the client refused the dose
D. Leave the medication with the client and let him take it when he finishes the
conversation
An sw er : B. Wait for the client to excuse himself from the telephone conversation and
observe the client taking the medication
Rationale:
Medication administration requires verification of the “five rights,” including observing
the client actually take the medication for safety and documentation. Interrupting a
phone call can be disrespectful, but it is important to wait until the client is free to
safely administer meds. Leaving meds unattended or documenting refusal without
client’s consent violates safety protocols.
---
### 2.
A client is admitted to the postoperative surgical unit with two chest tubes after a left
EXAM
NCLEX (NGN), Case-based Scenarios,
Actu al Qs & An s to Pass th e Exam
THIS HESI PN EXIT CONSISTS OF
Each Exam has 75 Qs and Ans
multiple-choice questions (MCQs)** with four
options (A–D), answers, and detailed rationales
aligned with HESI PN Exit Exam 2025 standards.
Some questions are flagged as **NCLEX-style (NGN)**, and relevant **case studies/vitals** are
integrated where applicable.
,
, Table of Contents
HESI PN EXIT V1 EXAM..................................................................... 2
HESI PN EXIT V2 EXAM..................................................................54
HESI PN EXIT V3 EXAM................................................................108
HESI PN EXIT V4 EXAM................................................................162
HESI PN EXIT V5 EXAM................................................................217
HESI PN EXIT V6 EXAM...............................................................259
HESI PN EXIT V7 EXAM................................................................299
, ### 1.
The practical nurse enters a male client’s room to administer routine morning
medications, but the client is on the phone. Which action is best for the PN to take?
A. Ask another nurse to go back with the medication when the client’s phone call ends
B. Wait for the client to excuse himself from the telephone conversation and observe
the client taking the medication
C. Return the medication to the client’s drawer on the medication cart and
document the client refused the dose
D. Leave the medication with the client and let him take it when he finishes the
conversation
An sw er : B. Wait for the client to excuse himself from the telephone conversation and
observe the client taking the medication
Rationale:
Medication administration requires verification of the “five rights,” including observing
the client actually take the medication for safety and documentation. Interrupting a
phone call can be disrespectful, but it is important to wait until the client is free to
safely administer meds. Leaving meds unattended or documenting refusal without
client’s consent violates safety protocols.
---
### 2.
A client is admitted to the postoperative surgical unit with two chest tubes after a left